The Law Magazine and Review: A Quarterly Review of Jurisprudence

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Page 93It was contended in Holstein and Germany that Schleswig and Holstein must
follow the Salic law and fall to a junior but masculine branch. This argument had
a double aspect in respect of Schleswig—either (a) the Salic rule prevailed there
as ...

Page 94Consequently, we have three sections—Royal Schleswig, of which the King was
Duke, Ducal Schleswig which was entirely in the hands of the Duke of Holstein-
Gottorp, and Holstein, of which the overlord was the Emperor. But in 1713 the ...

Page 95of the position of Henry IV as Duke of Lancaster, when the duchy was saved from
merger, to throw light on the dual position of the Danish King as at once
Sovereign and Lord of Schleswig.' The conquest of 1721, alluded to above,
resulted, ...